Drake Pardo: Texas Medical Kidnapping Exposed

Picture of Drake Pardo & Parents

Photo Credit: thsc.org

Drake Pardo, a medically fragile 4-year-old, was forcibly removed by Texas CPS in June 2019 after his parents sought a second medical opinion—an alarming case of medical kidnapping rooted in systemic CPS overreach.

What Happened in the Pardo Family Home

  • Emergency removal: Without notice, armed CPS agents and police seized Drake on June 20. He was taken from his siblings and parents while attorneys were denied access.

  • Doctor’s affidavit: CPS based its action on an affidavit by Dr. Suzanne Dakil, who had never personally examined Drake, labeling his parents as potentially inducing illness and seeking an “unnecessary” feeding tube.

  • Legal violations: CPS ignored multiple Texas statutory safeguards, including failure to inform the family of allegations, make contact, or attempt non-invasive interventions before removal.

Six Months of State-Caused Trauma

  • Court struggle: Despite legal appeals, Drake remained in state custody for five months until the Texas Supreme Court ordered his return in October 2019.

  • Child Abuse Registry stigma: Even after reunification, CPS kept the Pardo family listed as “abusers,” only reversing it in December 2020 after public advocacy.

  • Long-term impact: Drake lost months of bonding time; his siblings were traumatized; Ashley and Daniel faced emotional and reputational damage—all over disputes physicians never substantiated.

Systematic Failures Behind This Ordeal

  1. CAP-Driven Decisions: One child abuse pediatrician’s findings overrode the parents’ medical judgment and existing specialists.

  2. No requirement for direct evaluation: Dr. Dakil relied solely on records, never meeting Drake, yet influenced CPS to act.

  3. Statutory bypass: CPS invoked “emergency” powers without meeting legal thresholds or notifying the family properly.

  4. Registry abuse: CPS institutional inertia tagged the Pardos as abusers for over a year, impacting their lives long after innocence was established.

Calls for Reform Inspired by the Pardo Case

  • HB 2536 (“Drake’s Law”): Prohibits CPS removals solely for parents seeking second medical opinions—a direct legislative response to the Pardo case.

  • Recording rights: Texas legislators advanced bills allowing parents to record CPS visits—empowering families to document potential abuse of power.

  • Registry safeguards: Advocacy resulted in mandated reevaluation of rumored registry criteria after wrongful tagging in cases like the Pardos’.

What Parents Can Learn from the Pardo Case

FAQ About Drake Pardo & Medical Kidnapping

Q: Can CPS remove a child without a court order in Texas?
Yes—Texas Family Code allows emergency removal, but only if imminent danger exists and all alternatives are exhausted. In Drake’s case, CPS bypassed required steps.

Q: How could a doctor who never met Drake sway the case?
Dr. Dakil’s affidavit was based solely on medical records and claimed “medical child abuse.” Courts often defer to CAPs, even without first-hand assessment.

Q: Is labeling families as “abusers” permanent?
Not always. However, CPS retains the power to list a family despite exoneration, creating long-term stigma—illustrated by the Pardo registry delay.

Q: Did this case lead to any real change?
Yes. Bills were passed to protect second opinions and recording rights. The Pardo case catalyzed state-level legislative reform .

Final Take

The Pardo family should never have been torn apart for seeking additional medical insight. Drake’s story shows how medical kidnapping can spiral into trauma, stigma, and injustice. The reforms born from this case—like “Drake’s Law”—are vital, but more systemic change is still needed.

Share this post to keep the pressure up and ensure no other family endures what the Pardos did.


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Noah McAdams: A Florida Case of Medical Kidnapping Over Parental Medical Rights

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Baby Cyrus: A Traumatic “Medical Kidnapping” in Idaho